A groovy pair of gulls

Silver Gulls, Darling Harbour, Sydney

Sydney Trip Report June 2011

On our trip to Sydney earlier this year we visited Darling Harbour in the heart of Sydney. Many people were gathered there for the Jazz and Blue Festival. In addition to the human audience, these two Silver Gulls seemed to be enjoying the free music too.

In addition to the many Silver Gulls around the harbour, I also saw plenty of White Ibis, Australian Ravens, Rock Doves and those pesky Common Mynas.

This just proves the versatility of this hobby called birding; you can watch birds anywhere.

Sometimes, I feel that the birds are watching us!

Silver Gulls, Darling Harbour, Sydney

Jazz & Blues Festival, Darling Harbour, Sydney

Steam trains and lack of birds

Steam train, Central Station, Sydney

Sydney Trip Report June 2011

On the first weekend of our recent holiday in Sydney, we went as a family for a 75 minute trip on the steam train shown above. It was an excellent treat and my 2.5 year old grandson (who loves trains) thought it was excellent but did admit afterwards, “I liked it but I was a little bit nervous.” (Bless him.)

I didn’t see any birds of note on the train trip but then I wasn’t really focussed on that. Back in Central Station waiting for the train to depart again on its next journey, I did manage this poor photo of a Common Myna (see below). Nothing exciting about that, but it was one of the few birds I saw all day.

Sorry – I forgot about the many Rock Doves actually inside the station building. They are so common in places like that one forgets to take note of them.

Common Myna, Central Railway Station, Sydney

A short stay in Narrandera, New South Wales

Lake Talbot Tourist Park, Narrandera, NSW

Sydney Trip Report June 2011

On our trip to Sydney earlier this year we stopped for the night at the Lake Talbot Tourist Park on the edge of Narrandera in the mid west of New South Wales. It’s a lovely town with beautiful country all around, the kind that makes you decide to make a return visit some day. We had a cabin booked for the night and this was very comfortable and we had a good night’s sleep. I’d recommend this park to any visitors.

Next morning I took out a few minutes to get some photos of the park and the lake. I could hear plenty of birds calling and saw a few in the park but didn’t have time to take any photos of them. Instead, I’ll just list the birds heard or seen as I packed the car.

  • Galah
  • Australian Raven
  • Common Blackbird
  • Willie Wagtail
  • Sulphur-crested Cockatoo
  • Black-faced Cuckoo-shrike
  • Weebill
  • Australian Magpie
  • Noisy Miner
  • Laughing Kookaburra
  • Little Pied Cormorant
  • Black Swan
  • Grey Fantail
  • White-winged Chough
  • Magpie Lark

This area is obviously very good for birding and I’d like to explore the region in more depth someday. When we paid for our stay, the park office had several brochures available about birding places in the district. These pamphlets listed about 6 or 7 good birding spots near the town plus a little further off. It’s good to see that birders are being catered for in this way. It’s certainly a good birding are because this part of the state is a transition zone between birds of the highlands to the east and the much drier plains to the west.

Someday I’ll spend a week or so there.

Good birding.

Lake Talbot, Narrandera, NSW

Lake Talbot, Narrandera, NSW

Australasian Pipit, Hay Plains, New South Wales

Hay Plains, western New South Wales

Sydney Trip Report June 2011

When we travel to Sydney to stay with family we usually have to drive over the Hay Plains. This very flat region is in western New South Wales. I guess most people find this drive boring and try to complete this leg of the journey as quickly as speed limits allow. The road is very good and you can maintain 110kph for several hours without having to slow down – unless you get behind a slow moving car towing a caravan.

My wife and I don’t find this drive at all boring. In fact I look forward to it. The region has very few trees; the photo above is a typical view. Trees are usually only found around the few farmhouses and along water courses. The Murrumbidgee River to the north and the Murray River to the south are some distance from the highway, so trees are few.

Despite this limitation, the birding is often wonderfully good, especially as far as raptors are concerned. On our most recent crossing of the plains earlier this year I recorded the following birds of prey:

  • Wedge-tailed Eagle (two only)
  • Nankeen Kestrel (common)
  • Black-shouldered Kite (common)
  • Black Kite (common)
  • Little Eagle (one only)

Other species seen include:

  • Australian Raven (common)
  • Australian Magpie (common)
  • Australian Magpie Lark (common)

Probably the most outstanding sighting was of the Australasian Pipit (see photo below). I’ve never seen so many in one day before. I’m used to seeing the odd one or two on the road or on the roadside verges. I didn’t do a count but there must have been several hundred present over about a 50km stretch of road. All of them were on the road, not the edges, and would only just fly out of the way of approaching vehicles.

Interesting behaviour; I’m guessing that they were feeding on road kill. This area is rich in insect life and fast moving vehicles account for many insect deaths. This area had recently experienced a locust plague with some remnants of that time still around. It must have been a veritable smorgasbord for them.

By way of contrast, on our return trip over the same route two weeks later, I didn’t see any pipits at all.

 

Australasian Pipit, Yorke Peninsula, South Australia

There were no galahs at Galah

Galah, Murray Bridge, South Australia

Sydney Trip Report June 2011

When we take the most direct route from home in Murray Bridge to Sydney, we travel through a small locality known as Galah. There is no town there; only a few farm houses, a railway siding and a grain silo. I suspect it was originally called Galah because the parrot is common in the area.

There is a certain irony then in the fact that in all our drives through this area I have never seen a galah flying or perching in a tree or feeding on the grass. Mind you, one can maintain a speed of 100kph through the locality and that only gives me a minute of two to observe any birds that are present.

On this trip I only recorded 3 species:

  • Nankeen Kestrel
  • Little Raven
  • Crested Pigeon

I’m sure if you spent an hour or two scouring the trees and farmland that list would grow considerably, but on most occasions we are on a tight schedule so we can either spend time with family in Sydney, or we are tired on our return and want to get home.